i'm rather pleased with this thing. it's worked out pretty well. i've built it for use in my live set although i'll need to secure it all together before travelling anywhere. at the moment the bits inside are all loose.
it's based on a tiny buddhist loop machine (available on ebay from hong kong for a couple of quid) which feeds into a 'maxsound' echo circuit board i pulled from a megaphone toy (50pence from a car booty). you can also use the echo part of the box with an audio input by flicking a switch. i've housed it all in a very old wooden first aid box.
yes, the patch bay is a little bit of overkill... hehehhe. but hey, it works! there are a lot of possible bend points on the circuit board. filtering, noise, feedback, glitches....
inside:
the above photo shows the buddhist part of the box. it's a very lofi sample playback device which cycles between loops via a button. groovy old chinese vocals. you can also buy a buddha box with loops from the electronica outfit fm3 but for this project i wanted the original sounds. it's a tiny little circuit board but there are bends to be found. the two knobs in the buddha tweak section of the controls are both pitch bends. low or high, the circuit does not seem to want to crash
.
now the echo part:
the soldering made me go a bit crosseyed but it seems worthwhile now! it sounds great!
the little echo board is 9volt powered. seems a bit high for something so tiny don't you think? it's a bit like a guit fx pedal... as a comparison, the buddha box runs off 3volts... hmmm. could it be because the echo circuit contains a little amplifier chip on it? maybe that draws a bit of juice... it seems to amplify the incoming signal and which then gets routed through the echo. because of the amp/echo combo the feedback you get is really warm and dubby and some of the patch combinations cause a total collapse of the high end resulting in a lovely rumbling effect.
i'll get some sound clips posted up soon if anyone is interested. i've not had any time to record with the machine yet and i know it will suck me into a music session for hours.
now a question... i might try and add a wet/dry mixer knob for the echo. is this as simple as i think it will be? i'm thinking i need some sort of double pole mixer pot? any ideas?